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Press release
NANOSCIENCE | |||
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Paris, April 11, 2002 |
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Researchers of the molecular electronics group of the CEMES-CNRS center in Toulouse, France (Centre délaboration de matériaux et détudes structurales) and the Department of Physics and Astronomy of the University of Aarhus (Denmark) have described in the April 12, 2002 issue of Science a specially designed nano-template(1) molecule which enables the self-assembly(2) of atomic wires on a copper substrate. These results will pave the way for the electric interconnection of molecular components, and eventually enable mono-molecular circuits. The molecule synthesized and
developed at the CEMES-CNRS center by André Gourdon, Ping Jiang
and Christian Joachim resembles a four-legged table: its top is a molecular
wire that is maintained .36 nm above the copper substrate by four molecular
legs. After placing the molecule on the surface of a copper crystal, Federico
Rosei, Michael Schunack and Flemming Besenbacher of the University of
Aarhus observed its behavior with a scanning tunneling microscope (STM).
This microscope not only provided atomic scale images of the surface of
the molecule, it was also used to move individual molecules at will. A
combination of microscopy and molecular manipulation enabled the researchers
to observe that each molecule acted like a nano-template. Laterally confined
by its four legs, the nanoscopic molecular cavity formed underneath
the molecules tabletop captures copper atoms from the
copper substrate, which are trapped between the four legs. An atomic wire
is formed during the displacement of the molecule over the copper substrate
as the molecule leaves a line of copper atoms behind it. The theoretical
work of the CEMES-CNRS group in Toulouse also led to a precise description
of the process involved in the formation of these atomic wires and a better
understanding of the small variations (about .01 nm) in the size of the
molecular template required in the assembly of an atomic wire. (1)
Nano-template: shape at a nanometric scale (1 nm = 10-9 meter) that can
be used to form a string of atoms. References: F. Rosei, M. Schunack, P. Jiang, A. Gourdon, E. Laegsgaard,
I. Stensgaard, Researcher
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